Tag: Shoppi Tivoli

  • New hotel harry’s home invites to open day

    New hotel harry’s home invites to open day

    The hotel harry’s home at Industriestrasse 160 in Spreitenbach has been in operation since Monday, 3 July. The opening on Wednesday, 5 July was attended by numerous guests from business and politics as well as the founder of the international hotel chain of the same name, Harald Ultsch. The hotel operates under the name harry’s home Zurich-Limmattal. For Saturday, 8 July, the hotel invites guests to visit the facility at an open day.

    On the website of the new Spreitenbach hotel, the location is highlighted as an asset. In the middle of the beautiful Limmattal and only a few metres away from the largest shopping centre in Switzerland, the harry’s home Zurich-Limmattal is located, it says. This is a reference to the Shoppi Tivoli shopping centre with 150 shops and restaurants right next door. The Umwelt Arena is also in the immediate vicinity.

    Thanks to the Limmattalbahn, the centre of Zurich is easily accessible directly from the hotel. The operators also advertise the region: green valleys, rolling hills, the Limmat river and numerous wellness oases in the spa canton of Aargau form the perfect destination for nature lovers, excursions, hikes or relaxation around the hotel, they say.

    Harald Ultsch from Innsbruck is the inventor and founder of the hotel chain harry’s home and flats. His family has been in the hotel business for five generations, according to the hotel’s website. The concept is based on individualisation and allows for a flexible living experience in the studios. As is usual in modern hotels, there is Wi-Fi, a private parking space and the possibility to bring pets. “Spreitenbach is going through a major phase of renewal in terms of urban development, infrastructure and mobility, and we are pleased to be part of this process,” said Harald Utsch at the opening.

    The harry’s home chain says it comprises ten hotels in Austria, Germany and Switzerland with a total of 729 studios and over 1500 beds. At the new hotel in the Limmat Valley, sustainability and cooperation with companies from the region are also very important. This can be seen, for example, in the cooperation with bakery pioneer Fredy Hiestand’s baked goods provider Fredy dä Beck in the area of baked goods and catering. The company also operates a branch in Schlieren ZH.

  • Shoppi Tivoli takes over the Limmat Valley Railway station

    Shoppi Tivoli takes over the Limmat Valley Railway station

    With a ceremonial "key handover" the "Shoppi Tivoli" stop of the Limmattalbahn (LTB) was handed over to the Shoppi Tivoli shopping center by the operator Aargau Verkehr (AVA) on Monday. According to the Shoppi Tivoli media release, the management of Aargau Verkehr AG and Shoppi Tivoli Management AG and other guests, including the mayor of Spreitbach, Markus Mötteli, attended.

    For Severin Rangosch, CEO Aargau Verkehr, the realization of the Limmattalbahn is a commitment to the region. One believes in their potential, Rangosch is quoted as saying.

    Patrick Stäuble, center manager and CEO of Shoppi Tivoli, is quoted as saying that the management is "proud to be able to present the Shoppi Tivoli train station today". This is extremely important for the shopping center, but also for the adjacent facilities, including the environmental arena and the entire Tivoli Garden district with its housing, a medical center, shopping facilities and a kindergarten.

    The Shoppi Tivoli is preparing for the station by expanding its service to the special needs of travelers. There are already five new fast food restaurants at the entrance to the LTB train station. And they are still accessible after the official closing time. According to CEO Stäuble, this will also include a restaurant that is open seven days a week.

    “The stop will be directly under the CenterMall. So you get off the train, take the escalator and you're already in the Shoppi Tivoli. This connection will be a major milestone for us, because development is taking place along the Limmattalbahn," Stäuble was quoted as saying in an interview with the regional location promoter Limmatstadt AG.

  • 50 years of Shoppi Tivoli Spreitenbach

    50 years of Shoppi Tivoli Spreitenbach

    Patrick Stäuble, the chairman of the management and center manager of the Shoppi Tivoli, is 51 years old. The Shoppi Tivoli celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. A lot has changed since 1970: “When it opened, the shopping center had 50 shops. Today over 450 brands are represented », says the boss. The leisure activities have also changed – what used to be the bowling alley is now the fitness center or the wide range of restaurants. The Shoppi Tivoli is undisputedly important for Spreitenbach: "It was like a UFO that landed 50 years ago in the middle of the farming village," says Stäuble.

    The Shoppi Tivoli was the first shopping center in Switzerland – a pioneering achievement. To understand that it was built in Spreitenbach of all places, you have to take a look at history: it was the local planner at the time, Klaus Scheifele, who in the 1950s designed the structure plan for the construction of the new Spreitenbach together with other experts. On the basis of the Athens Charter – the urban development manifesto by the Swiss architect Le Corbusier. The idea was so well received by planners, politicians and investors that it triggered a real construction boom.

    A shopping center was also included in this structure plan. Karl Schweri, the then Denner boss, secured the land intended for this through his real estate fund and was looking for an architect with experience in America. The Swiss Walter Hunziker got in touch, who had lived in the USA for ten years and obtained a diploma as an architect and urban planner there. Together with the economist Fritz Frey, he founded Transplan AG and began planning a new city center in Spreitenbach in 1962. The «Shoppi» opened eight years later. Up to this point in time the place could triple its population. “At that time Spreitenbach also attracted many couples who were not married. Cohabiting was forbidden in Zurich, but not in the canton of Aargau, ”explains Stäuble.

    Hunziker had great visions – not all of which could be implemented. The aim was to grow to 30,000 inhabitants – in 2020 there will be a little over 10,000 who will live in Spreitenbach. With its rapid development and the many high-rise buildings, the former farming village has attracted many foreign residents. "Spreitenbach has got a certain reputation," says Stäuble. The municipality can score points with a beautiful village center in the upper area and the modern high-rise buildings and of course the Shoppi Tivoli in the new part. But the signs are not bad that Spreitenbach will manage the turnaround after all – a lot is being built again at the moment. The center manager is happy about projects such as “Tivoli Garden” with 320 apartments: “That also attracts a lot of people who appreciate having the shopping center right next door.” The center manager finds it a shame that the “Neumatt” project, which would have bordered directly on the Shoppi Tivoli, was rejected: “I think this is a missed opportunity for Spreitenbach. But it is probably just a bit much for the population with the construction of the Limmattalbahn and the Tivoli Gardens. I think the project was good, only the timing was bad. "

    In general, Stäuble assumes that Spreitenbach will position itself ideally in the city on the Limmat. The Limmatstadt has the important task of connecting the Limmat Valley across the canton border. The Limmattalbahn is also important for this. “This connection is important for us as well as for the next generation. People settle where there are good public transport connections and a wide range of leisure and dining options. " And especially the younger people don't care whether they live in Aargau or Zurich now. "They want to be where life happens, where they can spend their free time the way they want." Spreitenbach offers ideal conditions for this. Not least because of the Shoppi Tivoli, which has 4.5 million visitors annually. During the week up to 15,000 visitors come every day, on a weekend that could be 38,000, says Stäuble: “We are still a weekend center. A visit to the Shoppi Tivoli is a leisure activity, you can stroll, shop and take the whole family with you. Both the CenterMall and the TivoliMall have been rebuilt or rebuilt in recent years. "Several hundred million have been invested – the Shoppi is now equipped with international brands and a large range of leisure and gastronomy options and is therefore fit for the future," Stäuble is convinced. A shopping center is never finished. The trends today would be in the direction of leisure, cosmetics and services. “This is an ongoing process and we have to face it. But it certainly no longer needs major investments, now all that is needed is all-round development. " And there will also be transformations in terms of digitization. “I think it's going to be a combination of online and offline. So, for example, that I can choose my jeans in a store, but then don't have to drag the bag home, but the pants are delivered straight to my home the next day. "

    "Shopping
    wearing a mask is not an experience. "


    The question of the future also arises with regard to the corona pandemic. This hit the Shoppi Tivoli hard. But the lockdown got off to a good start: “There are industries that have recovered practically 100 percent. But the textile industry in particular will not be able to make up for the loss, ”explains Stäuble. Severely affected tenants have been exempted from 50 percent of the rent.

    While the canton of Zurich has made it mandatory to wear a mask in shops, you can still shop mask-free in the canton of Aargau. Stäuble does not notice an increased influx of people from Zurich who prefer to go without a mask: “Nevertheless, I am very happy that we do not have to wear a mask. Shopping in this size is an experience. We sell emotions – that's just more difficult with a mask. We have over 1400 employees – and we don't have a single corona infection on the seller side. The people here are on the move and not in long contact with one another. "

    So Stäuble looks to the future with confidence. Even if he still sees a few to-do's on a political level. For example, the implementation of longer opening times and more Sunday sales. “The saleswomen therefore no longer work or no longer work, only in other shifts,” the boss disproves a counter-argument that has been put forward many times. With the continued emergence of a «Limmat city», progress is also required on a political level. The center manager could even imagine that one day the Shoppi Tivoli will be called “Shoppi Tivoli Limmatstadt”. ■

  • “Tivoli Garden”: An identity-defining project

    “Tivoli Garden”: An identity-defining project

    A look back: The major project in Spreitenbach is marked by years of delays. For example, VCS Aargau defended the project in 2012 and submitted an objection. He demanded an expansion of the environmental impact assessment, which covers the entire area, including the shopping center.
    rums “Shoppi Tivoli”, the Limmatpark and the parking spaces available to the “Shoppi Tivoli” in the environmental arena. After the revised design plan, the VCS filed another complaint, this time because of the parking space management, which did not go far enough for the traffic club. Those involved were finally able to agree on a compromise solution in January 2019 – and nothing stood in the way of the project.

    Identifying feature
    With the “Tivoli Garten” development, five houses with a total of 445 rental apartments, a double kindergarten, an Obi hardware store and a stop for the Limmattalbahn are now being built in the immediate vicinity of the “Shoppi Tivoli” shopping center. The proposed mix of apartments consists of 1½ to 5½ room apartments. The generous private outdoor spaces are intended to meet the needs of the various tenant groups, i.e. families, singles and pensioners, for example.

    Base construction with two towers
    The superstructure consists of a base building with the Obi hardware store and the Limmattalbahn stop, from which two high-rise buildings and three up to seven-storey long buildings extend. The project managers emphasize that the two high-rise buildings act as an identity-defining feature of the development. They also interact with the two existing high-rise apartment buildings in the “Shoppi Tivoli” area from the 1960s. The spacious outdoor areas are located in the private courtyard of the "Tivoli Garden". Eiffage Suisse, Zurich office, was entrusted with the implementation of the major project. Solid construction strives for the Minergie / greenproperty standard.

    Direct access to the "Shoppi Tivoli"
    A public pedestrian level with direct access to the “Shoppi Tivoli” is planned on the base building. The passerelle concept of the municipality of Spreitenbach allows further connections to the surrounding parcels at this level, and at street level a new transfer hub for public transport with the Limmattalbahn and various bus routes is designed.

    The major project was developed jointly by the Migros Aare cooperative and Credit Suisse Asset Management. The owner is MEG Tivoli Garten, which consists of two real estate funds from Credit Suisse Asset Management. ■